Calculate your household emissions and how solar can help you reach carbon neutrality
Enter your household’s annual energy usage, transport habits, and flight frequency to calculate your total carbon footprint. Then input your solar system details to see how much carbon dioxide your panels offset each year. The calculator shows how long it takes for solar to pay back its manufacturing emissions and the net carbon benefit over 25 years.
The UK grid produces approximately 207g of CO₂ per kWh (2023 average). This has dropped significantly from 500g+ a decade ago as renewables have grown. Solar panels displace grid electricity, so every kWh you generate prevents this carbon being emitted — though the offset value will decrease as the grid decarbonises.
Natural gas produces about 183g of CO₂ per kWh burned. For most UK homes, gas heating is the largest single source of household emissions. Solar panels alone cannot offset gas usage, but combining solar with a heat pump can eliminate this entirely, making your home fully electric and potentially carbon-neutral.
A typical petrol car emits about 268g of CO₂ per mile. Diesel is slightly higher at 278g. Hybrids cut this to around 160g, while electric vehicles charged from the grid produce only about 53g per mile. If you charge an EV from your solar panels, the emissions drop to near zero — making the combination of solar and EVs particularly powerful.
Flying produces significant emissions: a return flight to New York generates about 1.8 tonnes of CO₂ per passenger — equivalent to running your home electricity for over three years. Short-haul European flights average about 0.4 tonnes return. For frequent flyers, this often dominates the carbon footprint. Solar cannot directly offset flights, but excess generation does contribute to grid decarbonisation.
Manufacturing solar panels requires energy and produces carbon emissions — typically 500-700kg of CO₂ per kWp of capacity. This is known as “embodied carbon.” The good news is that solar panels pay back this carbon debt quickly:
UK panels typically offset their manufacturing carbon within 2-3 years of operation
After payback, every year generates pure carbon savings for the remaining lifespan
Over 25 years, panels save roughly 10x the carbon used in their manufacture
Solar panels don’t directly capture CO₂ — they offset emissions by displacing fossil fuel electricity generation. When your panels produce electricity, the National Grid needs to generate less from gas power stations (which still provide significant UK baseload). This displacement is what creates the carbon saving.
Electricity you use directly from your panels provides the clearest carbon offset — you avoid grid electricity entirely. A typical home uses 50% of solar generation directly, with higher percentages achievable with battery storage or being home during daylight hours.
Electricity exported to the grid still provides carbon benefit — it reduces the need for gas generation at that moment. Your neighbour may use your solar electricity instead of grid power. We count this at the same carbon factor as direct consumption.
As the UK grid decarbonises (target: net zero by 2035), the carbon offset per kWh will decrease. However, solar installed today still provides decades of benefit, and your panels contribute to accelerating this grid decarbonisation by adding renewable capacity.
For electricity use alone, yes — solar can easily offset all your electricity consumption. For whole-household neutrality including gas and transport, solar is a significant step but typically covers 15-30% of total emissions. Full carbon neutrality usually requires also switching to a heat pump for heating and an electric vehicle for transport.
Most embodied carbon comes from purifying silicon and manufacturing solar cells, processes that require significant energy. Chinese-manufactured panels (80% of global production) have higher embodied carbon because China’s grid relies more heavily on coal. European-manufactured panels have lower embodied carbon but are more expensive. Either way, the carbon is paid back within 2-3 years.
Yes, batteries add embodied carbon — roughly 75kg CO₂ per kWh of capacity. A 10 kWh battery adds about 0.75 tonnes, extending payback by several months. However, batteries can increase self-consumption significantly, providing more value from each kWh generated. The carbon payback is still typically under 4 years for solar + battery systems.
Solar panels are recyclable — up to 95% of materials (glass, aluminium, silicon, copper) can be recovered. EU regulations require manufacturers to take back and recycle panels. Recycling infrastructure is developing as early panels reach end of life. Proper recycling is included in lifecycle carbon assessments.
Install the largest system your roof can accommodate — more generation means more offset. Add battery storage to increase self-consumption. Use solar to charge an electric vehicle. Consider a heat pump to electrify heating. Shift heavy electricity usage (washing, dishwasher, EV charging) to sunny periods to maximise direct solar use.
Solar panels provide one of the most effective ways for households to reduce their carbon footprint. With a carbon payback period of just 2-3 years and 22+ years of net benefit thereafter, a typical 4kW system saves 25-30 tonnes of CO₂ over its lifetime — equivalent to planting over 1,000 trees. While solar alone won’t make you carbon neutral if you have gas heating and a petrol car, it’s a significant first step and can offset 100%+ of your electricity emissions. Ready to get a price? Find out how much solar panels cost.